Abbrevation
ESLsyn
City
San Francisco
Country
United States
Deadline Paper
Start Date
End Date
Abstract

The ever&#8211;increasing need for enhanced productivity in designing highly complex electronic systems drives the evolution of design methods beyond traditional approaches&#046; Virtual prototyping, design space exploration and system synthesis are needed to design optimized systems, comprising hardware and software implementations&#046; Electronic system&#8211;level (ESL) design promises to provide system architects with the right tools to make the right decisions about the system architecture at early stages of the design process&#046; This includes methodologies and synthesis techniques that are supported by appropriate ESL models&#046; Furthermore, a well&#8211;connected ESL&#8211;to&#8211;implementation design flow is needed&#046; Overall, designing at higher levels of abstraction coupled with the right tool support is a viable way to better cope with the system design complexity, by increasing code reuse and allowing components to be verified earlier in the design process&#046;<br>The <strong>Electronic System Level Synthesis Conference ESL<em>syn</em></strong> focuses on automated system design methods that enable efficient modelling, synthesis, exploration and verification of systems from high&#8211;level specifications down to lower level implementations&#046; <p class="rtejustify"> <strong>Target Audience</strong><br>This conference will provide an overview of existing and emerging solutions provided by both industrial partners (EDA companies) and research institutions in the domain of ESL design and high&#8211;level synthesis&#046; It will give an outline of synthesis methods and tools currently available in the market and discuss their applicability, performance, strengths and user experiences&#046; Finally, the event will create a platform to foster discussion and exchange between providers of synthesis technology and industry users, as well as serving as a forum to discuss scientific concepts and paradigms for the future evolution of synthesis methods&#046;</p><p class="rtejustify"><br></p>